About Me

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I am a freelance writer. I've covered the Cincinnati Reds, Bengals and others since 1992. I have a background in sales as well. I've sold consumer electronics, advertising and consumer package goods for companies ranging from the now defunct Circuit City to Procter&Gamble. I have worked as a stats operator for Xavier University, the University of Cincinnati, the College of Mount St. Joe and Colerain High School.

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Jonathan India Walk Could Be Chico Ruiz Moment For A Reds Miracle

 

It was September 1964.

A middle aged man is riding in the car with his 10-year old son.  The Reds were trailing the National League leading Philadelphia Philles by 6 1/2 games with 12 games left to play.

"The Reds are finished for the season," said the father, jaded by the law of probabilities.   But his son had youthful optimism.  "They could win seven games in a row.  They play the Phillies tonight.  They could catch up."

"It is possible but I doubt it will happen," said the father.

The Reds indeed played the Phillies that night.  The Reds John Tsitouris was locked in a scoreless pitching duel with Western Hills graduate, Art Mahaffey for the Phils.

In the sixth inning, Mahaffey retired another West High grad, leading off the inning.  Chico Ruiz followed with a single.  Vada Pinson hit a bullet down the right field line and headed to second but Johnny Callison threw a strike to Ruben Amaro to nip Pinson for the second out.  Frank Robinson came to the plate.  For some unexplained reason, Ruiz took off for home.  He stole it clean to put the Reds ahead 1-0.   No one scored the rest of the game.  

The Phillies lead was cut to 5/12 with 11 games to play and the St. Louis Cardinals, six games behind.

The stunned Phillies lost nine more in a row.  By September 27, the Reds led the league by a game.

The 2021 Reds are now three games behind the Cardinals for the last wild card slot for the playoffs with 11 games to play, 3 1/2 games better than the 1964 team was at that point in the season.

The Pirates jumped out to a 5-0 lead against the Reds and Vladimir Gutierrez. 

There were two outs in the bottom of the third inning.  Reds' rookie spark plug, Jonathan India, walked.

A two-out walk with two outs in the third inning, didn't feel momentous and eminently forgetttable at the time.  Kyle Farmer followed with a single.  Nick Castellanos hit a drive high off the center field barrier off Dillon Peters, scoring both runners.  Joey Votto followed with his 32nd home run to pull the Reds within one run.  Votto's 34th tied the score. Eugenio Suarez put the Reds ahead with his 27th home run.  Farmer added his 15th to add to the margin.  The Reds eventually walked off with a 9-5 win.

After the game, Votto, Castellanos and manager David Bell insisted the spark was Jonathan India's walk.  

"It doesn't always have to be a home run," Bell said.  "Sometimes it is something as simple as grinding out an at bat."

"Home runs are nice but 0-for-5 or 5-for-5 you've got to win ballgames," Votto said.  "Comebacks are going to be necessary, not only with our record but within ballgames.  We are going to do it together.  Jonathan India's at bat was a pivotal moment."

True a base on balls is not as dramatic or exciting as a steal of home.  Could it lead to the playoffs?

Yes indeed it could.









Saturday, September 11, 2021

Murray State Pressures Cincinnati After Big 12 Celebration

 

The Cincinnati Bearcats were giddy from having been invited to join the prestigious Big12 conference. Little Murray State from the FCS Ohio Valley Conference was merely a warm up scrimmage before visiting Indiana and Notre Dame the next two weeks but the 42-7 win over the Racers was more difficult than expected.

The Racers dominated the first half in every facet but the scoreboard in the first half.  They held the ball for nearly 22 minutes and put up 190 yards of offense.  Limited to 19 plays Desmond Ridder's offense could only muster 83 yards in the eight minutes they controlled the pig skin.

Cincinnati grinded out a running game in the third quarter to take control.  Jerome Ford had scoring runs of three, eight and 13 yards in the second half to right the ship.  Ridder added a 23-yard touchdown strike to Tyler Scott to further Cincinnati's cause.

MSU quarterback Preston Rice scored on a one-yard run early in the second quarter but he threw three interceptions to allow Cincinnati to stay close.

Ridder's two-yard pass to Noah Davis evened the score that stood until halftime.  Both teams missed field goals with Aaron Baum of Murray State missing a 25-yard chip shot with 20 seconds left in the half.  

Rice also squandered a 53-yard drive to the Cincinnati 24 with and interception deep in the end zone by Ja'von Hicks.

Cincinnati backups added a late score when Evan Prater threw an 18-yard scoring pass to Payten Singletary.

MSU is 1-29-1 all time against FBS Division teams.  This was the first meeting ever between Murray State and Cincinnati.  Cincinnati is ranked 7th in the current AP poll and is the fifth top 25 opponent Murray has faced and fourth since 2012.  They remain winless against ranked teams.